| Literature DB >> 29190291 |
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Abstract
Since the turn of the century, a remarkable expansion has been achieved in the range and effectiveness of products and strategies available to prevent, treat, and control malaria, including advances in diagnostics, drugs, vaccines, and vector control. These advances have once again put malaria elimination on the agenda. However, it is clear that even with the means available today, malaria control and elimination pose a formidable challenge in many settings. Thus, currently available resources must be used more effectively, and new products and approaches likely to achieve these goals must be developed. This paper considers tools (both those available and others that may be required) to achieve and maintain malaria elimination. New diagnostics are needed to direct treatment and detect transmission potential; new drugs and vaccines to overcome existing resistance and protect against clinical and severe disease, as well as block transmission and prevent relapses; and new vector control measures to overcome insecticide resistance and more powerfully interrupt transmission. It is also essential that strategies for combining new and existing approaches are developed for different settings to maximise their longevity and effectiveness in areas with continuing transmission and receptivity. For areas where local elimination has been recently achieved, understanding which measures are needed to maintain elimination is necessary to prevent rebound and the reestablishment of transmission. This becomes increasingly important as more countries move towards elimination.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29190291 PMCID: PMC5708606 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1002455
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Med ISSN: 1549-1277 Impact factor: 11.069
Fig 1Tools for detecting and interrupting malaria transmission and their action in the malaria transmission cycle.
Insecticides for indoor residual spraying (IRS) under World Health Organization Pesticide Evaluation Scheme (WHOPES) evaluation and long-lasting insecticidal nets (LLINs) in late-stage development [39–41,177,178]*.
| Application | Product | Insecticide(s) |
|---|---|---|
| IRS | Phantom | Chlorfenapyr (phase III) |
| SumiShield | Clothianidin (phase II) | |
| Fludora Fusion | Deltamethrin + clothianidin (phase II) | |
| LLINs | DawaPlus 2.0 | Deltamethrin coated on polyester |
| LifeNet | Deltamethrin incorporated into polypropylene | |
| MiraNet | Alpha-cypermethrin incorporated into polyethylene | |
| Panda Net 2.0 | Deltamethrin incorporated into polyethylene | |
| Yahe | Deltamethrin coated on polyester | |
| LLINs + PBO | Olyset Plus | Permethrin + PBO incorporated into polyethylene |
| PermaNet 3.0 | Deltamethrin coated on polyester side panels; deltamethrin + PBO incorporated into polyethylene (roof) | |
| Veeralin | Alpha-cypermethrin and PBO incorporated into polyethylene | |
| Combination LLINs | Olyset Duo | Pyriproxyfen and permethrin incorporated into polyethylene |
| Interceptor G2 | Alpha-cypermethrin + chlorfenapyr coated on polyester |
*March/April 2016.
PBO, piperonyl butoxide
Knowledge gaps and tools to potentially bridge the gaps.
| Knowledge gaps | Tools to potentially bridge the gaps |
|---|---|
| High-to-low transmission | |
| • Why do transmission rates remain high even when case management and vector control have high coverage? | • Methods that are protective against infection and interrupt transmission ( |
| • At which point should interventions specifically directed at reducing transmission be introduced? | • Robust mathematical and laboratory models of transmission and impact of combination interventions. |
| • What is the contribution of the subclinical reservoir to transmission in high-transmission settings? | • Sensitive point-of-care tests to detect transmission reservoirs and enable evaluation of interventions. |
| • In vector control, which factors drive changes in transmitting species? | • Prevention or control measures effective against all species. |
| Low-to-zero transmission | |
| • How best can the remaining sources of transmission be identified? | • Affordable, rapid, sensitive screening techniques to identify populations generating infectious gametocytes. |
| • What is the impact of nonhuman malaria parasite transmission on the effectiveness of vector control? | • Vector control measures with efficacy independent of nonhuman transmission. |
| • How can transmission be measured when it is low or zero? | • See Malaria Eradication Research Agenda (malERA) Refresh ‘Characterising the reservoir and measuring transmission’ [ |
| • How can approaches to false-positive diagnostic tests be addressed? | • Development of highly sensitive and specific tests, along with combination testing algorithm/protocols to identify false positives. |
| • How can the | • Development of hypnozoite diagnostics, and/or antihypnozoite drugs/vaccines that are safe enough for use in population-based administration. |
| • How can heterogeneity in transmission be managed? | • Interventions that are safe and cost-effective enough to be used across wider populations. |
| Maintaining zero transmission | |
| • How can the efficacy of tools be measured when transmission is zero? | • Development of validated surrogate end points of efficacy. |
| • What are the drivers of epidemic malaria? | • Modification of vector populations to decrease epidemic potential; tools for epidemic response, including for nonimmune populations. |